Pro-RFK Jr. letter to the Senate includes names of doctors whose
licenses were revoked or suspended
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[February 01, 2025]
By MICHELLE R. SMITH
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — A letter submitted to the U.S. Senate that
states it was sent by physicians in support of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s
nomination as secretary of Health and Human Services includes the names
of doctors who have had their licenses revoked, suspended or faced other
discipline, The Associated Press has found.
The letter was meant to lend credibility to Kennedy’s nomination, which
has faced strenuous opposition from medical experts due to his two
decades of anti-vaccine activism. Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of
Louisiana, a medical doctor who boasts on his official website of an
effort he created to vaccinate 36,000 children against hepatitis B,
expressed hesitancy about Kennedy's nomination and is seen as a key
vote.
The AP found that in addition to the physicians who had faced
disciplinary action, many of the nearly 800 signers are not doctors. The
letter with the names of those who signed was provided to the AP by Sen.
Ron Johnson’s office after he entered it into the Congressional Record
on Wednesday during the first of Kennedy’s two confirmation hearings.
Among those who signed it were a self-described journalist, a certified
public accountant, a firefighter/paramedic, a certified health coach and
someone who said they had a bachelor’s degree “with an emphasis on
Jungian Psychology.” The signers include at least 75 nurses, as well as
physician's assistants. More than 90 did not include any credentials at
all.
Over 20 were chiropractors, representing an industry that has funded
Kennedy's work. An AP investigation found that donations from a
chiropractic group represented one-sixth of the revenues collected by
Kennedy's anti-vaccine nonprofit in 2019.
The letter was organized and submitted by MAHA Action, which is run by
Del Bigtree, who worked for Kennedy’s presidential campaign and is a
longtime anti-vaccine activist. The Washington Post reported Wednesday
that Kennedy transferred the trademark for the “MAHA” slogan to an
limited liability company run by Bigtree. Kennedy reported that he
received $100,000 in income from licensing the slogan and said in his
financial disclosures that he had transferred the trademark for “no
compensation.”
MAHA stands for “Make America Healthy Again,” a play on President Donald
Trump’s “Make America Great Again."
Emma Post, a MAHA Action spokesperson, said in an email that the letter
was “shared and circulated organically in a grassroots manner with
explicit instructions that it was for physicians only to sign on to.”
She did not address the AP’s questions about what further steps the
group took to verify credentials, if any.
Bigtree and Kennedy did not return messages seeking comment. A White
House spokesman, Kush Desai, said the administration looks forward to
the Senate's swift confirmation of Kennedy.
The letter includes the header “ Doctors for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ” and
begins with the words, “We, the undersigned physicians." It says lower
down that it “reflects the collective voice of physicians and medical
professionals” committed to addressing chronic disease.
The AP’s review found that at least 10 doctors who signed the letter had
run into trouble with state medical boards or their board certification
body for a variety of alleged misconduct. Sanctions they faced included
having their license revoked or suspended, being put on probation,
receiving a reprimand or other action. One received a warning letter
from the Federal Trade Commission, which said he was unlawfully
advertising products as treatments or prevention for COVID-19, including
intravenous nutrient therapy and vitamins.
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Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., President Donald Trump's nominee to serve as
Secretary of Health and Human Services, testifies during a Senate
Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions hearing for his
pending confirmation on Capitol Hill, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025, in
Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)
 Among the signers was Paul Thomas,
an anti-vaccine doctor who voluntarily surrendered his medical
license in 2022 after Oregon's medical board found he had engaged in
repeated and gross negligence in the practice of medicine.
Thomas did not admit or deny the finding. NBC News reported that
Thomas was part of a team assembled by Kennedy who remotely advised
an anti-vaccine activist in Samoa during a measles outbreak there on
how to treat children with vitamins. A person who responded on
behalf of Thomas, DeeDee Hoover, said the information the AP had was
inaccurate but did not reply when asked what specifically was wrong.
Other signers included Dr. Simone Gold, who was reprimanded by
California’s medical board after she pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor
for her conduct at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Gold was
recently pardoned by Trump and told the AP in an email that her
reprimand and other disciplinary action were overturned by a judge
prior to her pardon.
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“Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is an honorable and honest person with vast
subject matter knowledge and experience who values the health of the
American people, and furthermore because he is willing to challenge
corporate interests where they conflict with the best interests of
those citizens,” Gold wrote in an email.
Meryl Nass, whose medical license was suspended in Maine over her
treatment of COVID-19 patients, also signed. She told the AP she is
appealing the decision and expects to be fully vindicated.
At least two of the doctors were disciplined, prior to the pandemic,
for improperly giving out vaccine waivers, including one who had his
license revoked and another who was put on probation. Another
doctor's license was revoked for refusing to follow COVID-19
guidelines.
Post said MAHA Action’s letter was just one of several provided to
the Senate supporting Kennedy, including one that she provided a
link to that she said was signed by “17,000 medical professionals.”
That letter stated it was from international medical providers and
did not include the names of those who signed.
Opponents of Kennedy's nomination sent their own letter with
signatures from what they said were more than 18,000 “vetted and
verified” doctors. The group, the Committee to Protect Health Care,
said that the letter was initially circulated among verified
physicians and that as additional signatures were added, their
credentials were checked. The group provided the list of signatories
to the AP but with anonymized names that included the first initial
of their first name along with the first three letters of their last
name, as well as their medical credentials. They said doctors' names
were anonymized for their privacy and to protect them from
harassment.
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